IDS Editorial

Too little, but never too late

POSTED AT 09:40 PM ON Oct. 15, 2009 | PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (7)

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Cristina Vanko | IDS

WE SAY Hate crimes legislation is only a first step

The U.S. House of Representatives passed the fiscal year 2010 Defense Authorization Bill last week by a vote of 281 to 146 after voting last July to attach the Matthew Shepard Hate Crimes Prevention Act to the bill.

It speaks to the Democratic leadership’s dedication that they attached the legislation, which expands the definition of hate crimes to include crimes against victims selected for their sexual orientation and gender identity.

However, the measure may not have passed if it hadn’t been attached to must-pass legislation.

The passage of this bill brings the more inclusive hate crimes legislation closer than ever to President Obama’s desk.

Advocates for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender equality in Indiana owe Rep. Baron Hill, D-9th District, a big thank-you for his vote. Hill was even supportive of earlier, more trans-inclusive legislation.

Other Indiana representatives articulated the opposition stance. Rep. Mike Pence, R-6th District, made the ridiculous assertion that broadening the definition of hate crimes would limit freedom of speech.

Arguments like Pence’s aren’t likely to gain much support in the Senate, and hopefully the bill will pass swiftly toward President Obama’s desk.

Of course, both houses of Congress are currently unable to pass even the most basic extension of rights to GLBT citizens – that is, the right to be protected from hate-motivated crime.

The passage of this legislation will depend upon agreement on the defense authorization budget.

The House leadership made a smart move by attaching the hate crimes bill to the defense spending bill – politics can be a dirty game, and this move showed that advocates for gay rights are learning how to play.

However, the effort it took to get something like hate crimes in the door also reveals just how tightly the door will be shut on future fights for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” and eventual marriage equality.

If Obama is able to sign the hate crimes legislation into law, it will be an important milestone not only politically but for every family member, friend, ally and GLBT person who has feared hate-based victimization. But it’s still only the first step.

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6. Posted by Dr. Jillian T. Weiss at 7:16 AM on Oct 17, 2009 | Report this comment

The next step is the Employment Non-Discrimination Act that would prohibit job discrimination based on being gay. The bill is close to having enough votes for passage. See here for details: http://bit.ly/1v9fcp

5. Posted by T at 11:50 AM on Oct 16, 2009 | Report this comment

Hey, CG? That pride parade arrests weren't because they were speaking against homosexuality, it's because of their non-cooperation of police orders: http://phillypride.org/news.html Nice attempt at spinning that, though. Read the bill; you're still free to talk about your opinions on sexual orientation, but if someone uses that language while physically attacking someone, it may become classified as a hate crime.

4. Posted by CG at 10:39 AM on Oct 16, 2009 | Report this comment

The same types of bills have passed in Canada, England and Sweden and all have had the same chilling effects against Christians. Already Christians have been arrested for peacefully demonstrating at a gay pride parade in Philadelphia. So basically what you are doing is giving special rights to one group of people just because of their sexual orientation and taking away rights from religious people who believe in the Biblical word of God and its views against homosexuality. It's amazing to see how just 2 percent of the population (the homosexual community) can dictate to the 98 percent on such a steady basis. I thought this was a free country where we could share our views. Guess I was wrong.

3. Posted by Anonymous at 10:6 AM on Oct 16, 2009 | Report this comment

Why Mike Pence is allowed to speak in public is beyond me. I believe in "freedom" no exceptions. Why do religious conservatives insist on restricting the rights of gays? What ever happened to the concept of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness?" Gay people deserve the same exact rights and privileges as anyone else. No exceptions. The only people undermining their efforts for true liberty are the evangelicals who call for more religion in government. I thought that's why the Puritans set sail. Undermining someone's Constitutional civil liberties to satisfy a religious ideology is inherently unconstitutional. "No law shall be made respecting a religion..." Religious conservatives should be ashamed of themselves for being hypocrites.

2. Posted by ROb at 7:50 AM on Oct 16, 2009 | Report this comment

Thinks like this promote seperation and problems. Aren't all crimes that involve violence equal or are some more equal than others. "Four legs good. Two legs bad." "Four legs good. Two legs better." "All animals are equal." "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."

1. Posted by Sun Tzu at 2:34 AM on Oct 16, 2009 | Report this comment

When looking at any piece of legislation one must scrutinize as to whom it is that this bill will favor?. If it favors one group and takes freedoms away from others then this is an incorrect principle, and proposes a threat to ALL of the freedom that is enjoyed by the only nation that is truly a free republic. There is already judicial punishments for hate crimes in this country. This bill restricts other freedoms. For instance: Freedom of speech. One comment could land someone in prison. Also freedom of religion. Any person who reads the Bible and esteems them as Holy Scripture reads that immoral behavior is a sin and if a pastor, preacher or anybody speaks against such behavior, they can be put into prison as a person provoking hate activity.


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